ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS PAGE SEVEW By Charles Sughroc ' W eitem N ew ipipe, Union | \ K»U VJRVTG A L L 'TH' BOOKS " > '''( 'TYAEN VJAUT TO. PO W U G POM AT i SKA ALL T O V JH S, B U Y 'TVAEN G O T „ I _ ? '"ftH S C IT S U P £ B EA T. BACK HOME I J T ^ \ FOLKS ARE FP-lEMOVN, B uy MERE IF ^ p - l S E = ^J 'VA S P E A K TO A S T R A U Q E R , w e CALLS A cop B a c k mokae , vjweu \ go dovjm t u street em ' rn boot hollers " h ' l o , mmskie " a wo * X " MOW a r e TOO, XAVCKIE" BUT H ERE THEN GO BN LIKE A PAN C A R PASSIM' A TRAlAP ’ T U ' CUOSEST AMS BOON'S C O M E TÖ SPEAKIM’ To ME WUZ. LAST W E E K WHEM A LAON CALLEO "M ^ K IE ’ MICKVE'” AM' I TUR m EO ROUMO Q U IC K M HERE SHE WU7. CALUM' AM OLE OAWG > Small. Favon Thankfully Received — OUT OF TW6 KAO' DO W BE vBuOeWKlG TUE] %lO£\Mfc.vX t I t> w SPßAVOW TO XA6. K’ 27 \? \ | / / eJ Ä k Q 9 SSiSA. “h— B eauty Recipe U sed B y Cleopatra RABBI J. S. KORNFELD eau B U S IN E S S A N D P R O F E S S IO N A L One cent the word each time. DR. L IN C O L N X -R A Y KALLEN D IA G N O S IS DR. J A R V IS S A N IT A R IU M 1 to 4 p. m.— Phone 126 M E D F O R D : S A C R E D H E A R T H O S P IT A L 8 to 12 a. m.— Phone 714 POSITION W ANTED REFINED LADY wishes position as D R E R N E ST A. WOODS— Practice housekeeper for single man or limited to eye, ear, nose and widower, city or country. Mrs. Office hours, 10 to 12 and Mary Jackson, 209 Oak. 76-4*! throat. 2 to 5. Swedenburg Bldg., Ash­ land, Ore. 73-tf HELP WANTED. WANTED—Woman to do house­ DR. J. j . EMMENS— Physician and Surgeon. Practice limited to work on ranch. Mrs D. M. Horn eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses 123 Church St,_____ ' 75-4* supplied. Oculist and aurist for S. P. R. R. Offices, M. É. and H. W A N ! ED. Bldg., Medford, Ore. Phone 567 WANTED Work of any kind, by ' DR .WO good „«.Icy young me„. ‘Ad-j V MATTIF S ” “ ¿ it s S m w M o S • i * Courtesy of Fashion A rt Magazine. V es! Just as Old as That, but Improved by Modern Method»—Personality in Corsets is of Recent Discovery. , By SAN LUIS The mystery of line. The mystery of color. The mva- tery of grace. T hat’s all there :s to it. Mystery has always ''.’Oman's chief charm, from Helen of Troy and Dlerdre of Ireland to our •nost cherished beauty of today. We jan't any of us afford to destroy lllu« •ione. ’ Ja°. frth " a ^ V f - ^ *ul »he daisUM youlbsofutely hav^ •O begin the day comfortablX Go .vlthout your corset? Not 1’ you kn^w • he w a / o f the world and the Sesh T ST E R Y i M e:n ap s if you a re of th o se delectable r ' youthful " y ears wpen v itality .‘- .fii in ex h au stib le an d o n e's lines al- • t -• edit th em selves, it m ight seem , j ’" all rtgrtt to placidly accept one's :i «.- -i g i f t qi th e gods and go w ith- I < ;t: « v e .a g e woman can n ot tra n - ’• !'t herself as a g ift of the gods. Through the multiplicities of th e ages, woman has departed some- what from the original ideal In the warden of Eden and the woman of been today who says that ahe does not need a corset should realize that too much naturalness of figure Is ruinous to f&r charms. That women themselves have adijutted the truth of this unflattering ,the nee.d oi tpa t sophia- l' f nopion6,’ \ t0 b® aeei» * «»» a a the T 6 of Homer begVn to/ xper raent on ’"‘SE * a* h® °Ut ,n? their flgj.ea. Who first conceived the Idea or the corset and who was the first woman to wear one Is still one of the ur.raf.nomed mysteries of the «remote ag«s. but It Is known th at a kind of corset was In use as far back as the time of Cleopatnr (69-30 B. C.j, and it is asserted that she wore them. We must start our understanding with our corsets. We can’t oarelossly buy them by the yard, or wear a model befcauae It has reduced the hips of our best friend to almost unbelievable eljmness. or try a corset because some artful saleswoman tells us It Is the “style" and “everyone is wearing it." L e f t remember th a t the only true “style" In « h e t s la the style that best expressep pur own personality— I that W corresponds ^ X tp e a strictly datum. personal' And ¿atu ^ n you havS found that kind of " ? H « y -» ls e c J s e t th at will equalize >'°ur short^nd-long-com lngs with the esntle re3tr^ of a bit of Somfortab> placed boning (Just as much corset r. > may be necessary and as little as m. •• be possible to coax away any synir- toms of “hlpplnesa" and give tt i ’ right proportions th a t presur-t - J gracei-^&topl Stop hunting—for >?. ■ corset will be as good for you a>. day You bought It until Father r • sketches a bit of a different'< out li*-' be considered. who dodge every little noie, stone, horseshoe and broken bottle with a short turn of the steering wheel that results in an unpleasant swaying of the car body; who slow up and start ahead with annoying frequency and By PROF. ROMAINE NEWBOLD. University of Pennsylvania are repeatedly treating their compan­ ions in the car to thrilling moments of suspense as they narrowly avert the The key discovered to the cipher rode used by Roger Bacon, the T hir­ running down of a slower moving pe­ teenth century philosopher-monk, has revealed that Bacon knew of the destrian or a cyclist. Looking Ahead. telescope, nucroscope and scientific facta hitherto supposed to have been These differences are noticeable unknown until centuries later. alike on city streets and country At present it is only possible to conjecture at the extent and impor­ roads, and are amply sufficient to tance of the discoveries, for the art of reading the cipher is yet at its ehrly I make it a delight to ride with one friend at the wheel and almost tor­ stages and it is not certain tliat the whole manuscript can be read. ture to sit in the car behind another. The manuscript falls in four divisions, dealing with plants, the You may be unconscious of the pre­ heavenly bodies, the generation of animal life and preparation of d’rugB cise reasons that give you confidence -the common link connecting all four is probably Bacon’s interest in the in the one and make you apprehensive with the other, yet the feeling Is there. prolongation of human life. Plants are discussed because of their medi­ In all probability the secret lies in this cinal properties; the stars because they determine man’s character at his fine point in driving an automobile— birth, and influence him throughout his life; embryology because of the the distance ahead of the car at which the driver focusses his gaze. aring on later life of all factors influencing conception, and pharma- The proficient driver has early colog}' because drugs are essential to the cure of disease. learned to watch the road far in ad­ Bacon sketched with amazing accuracy the fundamental principles of vance of his car—as far, in fact, as the road is visible. On a straight, mathematical physics as we concave it today. Only less amazing is his level road this may be several miles, intuitive grasp of the principles of philology and of thetextual criticism ; on a winding course as far as the next his diagnosis of needed reforms in education, of the necessity of endowing turn; bn a hilly road the crest of the next rise, and on city streets as far as research work, of his forecasts of the development of medicine in the di­ the state of th* traffic permits the way rection of hygiene and preventive medicine and the application of chemis­ to be seen clearly. Following this practice, all bad try to physiology, agriculture and industry. places and small objects on the surface of the road are seen long before the car comes to them, and almost uncon­ sciously the car is steered to avoid them. The action begins so early that S ome lon 6 - face folks the movement is practically impercep­ RER-NOUNCE I> tY $ J O N E tible to other passengers, and the driv­ er does not find It necessary to keep